15
Aug 2011

FireRescue1: FCC to roll out multimedia, texting support for 911

See the written story by Brooks Boliek of Politico.com at FireRescue1.

Filed under  //   911   FCC   NG911   Next Generation 911   SMS   emergency services   fire department   public safety   texting  
23
Apr 2010

Retention vs. Viral Impact: Safety Education

Reach Them, But Keep Them

I just read an article on Mashable that discusses the importance of having retention in your social media marketing. The basic premise is that many companies and campaigns measure viral impact. This is, of course, important, but we all know that viral impact may be short-lived. It is great to reach thousands or hundreds of thousands of people with a message. That may last a day or two, though, and then crash. The hot topic of today become's yesterday's news -- then fades to obscurity.

In the article, Jeremy Richardson says,

Just because something becomes viral does not mean it will stay viral for long. Even if a situation arose where all the stars of virality are aligned — all of the users are inviting all of their friends, and all of their friends accept -– if there is no real retention, this phase will not last. The number of users will reach a saturation point, and then start to decline. If retention isn’t being tracked, then we have no idea why this is happening.

Big Numbers Don't Mean Big Results

It has always bothered me that one of the primary tracking methods used by public safety education programs is to count the number of people "reached." In a nutshell, it seems common practice to do a simple head count of the people that are present during a safety lesson, safety demonstration, or fire house tour. This number is then added to the mix and reported each year in the agency annual report. For instance, each year for the past 19 years I have taught approximately 8,500 children from preschool age through high school. If I do simple math, I can say that 161,500 children total have heard me present a lesson on safety.

Make An Impact, Bring Them Back

In my opinion, evaluation of the results of the safety lesson is the true factor in determining the effect. The number of people reached means nothing. Seriously. If I reach 8,500 kids with a message, but none of the kids retain that message -- therefore no behavior change results -- has the safety message made an impact? Wouldn't it be more important to show numbers where the lesson has made an impact? For example, isn't it better to show that X number of children stayed safe by exhibiting safe behaviors? That, however, is the bane of the safety educator. How does one document the fire that didn't happen or the fall that didn't cause an injury? You can't report intangibles.

So the key, then is retention. In order for us to affect change in behavior, environment or even basic safety knowledge, we must continue to deliver the message time and time again. We, the safety educators, hope to reach as many people as possible, of course. We also hope that they will remember what is said and carry the message forth. We earnestly hope that they will be interested enough to want to receive our messages. Their personal motivation and interest will bring them into a safety lesson with a desire to hear and see the potential to protect their own lives and property. It will help them remember the key information that will then be carried home to their families or back to their workplace. And, when we return again next month or next year, they will be willing to absorb the message.

Honestly, if a person is in my class, but asleep in their chair... I've presented the content, but have I really reached them? I can count this person as a warm body in the class, but there will be zero retention of a message they didn't hear.

Puppetshow_stingley_chuckarnold

 

Filed under  //   Mashable   analysis   education   learning   measurement   public safety   retention   safety education   viral impact  
18
Dec 2009

Vote for Charlotte Fire Department

My friends and NIOA colleagues Rob Brisley and Mark Basnight have been instrumental in building a social media and public information outreach for the Charlotte Fire Department. Their dedicated efforts are being recognized by peers.

The Charlotte Fire Department has been nominated as a finalist in the Social Media Responder 2009 competition held by PIO Social Media Training. There are other significant finalists mentioned, but I'm placing my vote for Charlotte. The dedication that this department has to its community, the on-going effort to provide up-to-date information, and the ability to use social media to communicate both "good to know" and "must know" information alike, have made this department stand out among others.

You can find more information and vote for any of the finalists at the Social Media Training site. One vote per day is allowed. Please consider voting for Charlotte FD. Follow them on Twitter: @charlotte, view their photos on Flickr, or see their videos on YouTube. They are doing a call-in radio show, as well. Find it on BlogTalk Radio.

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Filed under  //   Charlotte   PIO   fire department   public safety   public information   social media